Paper | Title | Page |
---|---|---|
TUIOB02 | Summary of the Symposium on Ingot Nb and New Results on Fundamental Studies of Large Grain Nb | 319 |
|
||
Funding: This manuscript has been authored by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177 The First International Symposium on the Superconducting Science and Technology of Ingot Niobium was held at Jefferson Lab in September 2010. Significant activities are taking place at laboratories and universities throughout the world to address several aspects related to the science and technology of Ingot Nb: from ingot production to mechanical, thermal and superconducting properties. A summary of the results presented at the Symposium is given in this contribution. New results on the superconducting properties and interstitial impurities content measured in large-grain Nb samples and cavities are briefly highlighted. |
||
TUPO051 | High-Temperature Heat Treatment Study on a Large-Grain Nb Cavity | 508 |
|
||
Funding: This manuscript has been authored by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177 Improvement of the cavity performance by a high-temperature heat-treatment without subsequent chemical etching have been reported for large-grain Nb cavities treated by buffered chemical polishing, as well as for a fine-grain cavity treated by vertical electropolishing [1]. Changes in the quality factor, Q0, and maximum peak surface magnetic field achieved in a large-grain Nb single-cell cavity have been determined as a function of the heat treatment temperature, between 600 °C and 1200 °C. The highest Q0 improvement of about 30% was obtained after heat-treatment at 800 °C-1000 °C. Measurements by secondary ion mass spectrometry on large-grain samples heat-treated with the cavity showed large reduction of hydrogen concentration after heat treatment. [1] G. Ciovati, G. Myneni, F. Stevie, P. Maheshwari, and D. Griffis, Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 13, 022002 (2010) |
||
THPO028 | SIMS and TEM Analysis of Niobium Bicrystals | 776 |
|
||
The behaviour of interstitial impurities(C,O,N,H) on the Nb surface with respect to grain boundaries may affect cavity performance. Large grain Nb makes possible the selection of bicrystal samples with a well defined grain boundary. In this work, Dynamic SIMS was used to analyze two Nb bicrystal samples, one of them heat treated and the other non heat treated (control). H levels were found to be higher for the non heat treated sample and a difference in the H intensity and sputtering rate was also observed across the grain boundary for both the samples. TEM results showed that the bicrystal interface showed no discontinuity and the oxide layer was uniform across the grain boundary for both the samples. TOF-SIMS imaging was also performed to analyze the distribution of the impurities across the grain boundary in both the samples. C was observed to be segregated along the grain boundary for the control sample, while H and O showed a difference in signal intensity across the grain boundary. Crystal orientation appears to have an important role in the observed sputtering rate and impurity ion signal differences both across the grain boundary and between samples | ||
THPO032 | TOF-SIMS Analysis of Hydrogen in Niobium, From 160°K to 475°K | 788 |
|
||
Niobium (Nb) is the material of choice for superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities due to its high critical temperature and critical magnetic field. Interstitial impurity elements such as H directly influence the efficiency of these cavities. Quantification of H in Nb is difficult since H is extremely mobile in Nb with a very high diffusion coefficient even at room temperature. In the presented work, Time of Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) was used to characterize H in Nb over a wide temperature range (160°K to 475°K) in situ to check for changes in mobility. Multiple experiments showed that as the specimen temperature is decreased below 300 °K, the H/Nb intensity changes by first increasing and then decreasing drastically at temperatures below 200°K. As specimen temperature is increased from 300°K to 450°K, the H/Nb intensity decreases. Remarkably, the H intensity with respect to Nb increases with time at 475°K (approximately 200oC). Correlation between this data and the H-Nb phase diagram appears to account for the H behaviour. | ||
![]() |
Poster THPO032 [0.125 MB] | |
THPO057 | Superconducting DC and RF Properties of Ingot Niobium | 856 |
|
||
Recently [1, 2], the DC and low frequency magnetic and thermal properties of large-grain niobium samples subjected to different chemical and heat treatment were measured. Here, we extend the similar study to the cylindrical hollow rods of larger diameter, fabricated from new niobium ingots, manufactured by CBMM. The results confirm the influence of chemical and heat-treatment processes on the superconducting properties, with no significant dependence on the impurity concentrations in the original ingots. Furthermore, RF properties such as the surface resistance and quench field of the niobium rods were measured using a TE011 cavity. The hollow niobium rod is the center conductor of this cavity, converting it to a coaxial cavity. The quench field is limited by the critical heat flux through the rods’ cooling channel.
[1] Mondal et al., SRF 2009, Berlin, 2009. [2] Dhavale et al.,Proc. of the First Int. Symp. on the Superconducting Sci. and Tech. of Ingot Niobium, AIP Conference Proceedings 1352, p. 119 (2011). |
||
![]() |
Poster THPO057 [1.238 MB] | |